Frederic Parke

Frederic Ira Parke is an American computer graphics researcher and academic. He did early work on animated computer renderings of human faces.

Frederic Parke
Born (1943-05-13) May 13, 1943
Salt Lake City, Utah
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Utah
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
physics
InstitutionsUniversity of Utah
IBM

Parke graduated from the University of Utah with a BS degree in physics in 1965. He was then a graduate student of the University of Utah College of Engineering where he received his MS (1972) and PhD (1974) in computer science.

In 1971, in a project partially financed by DARPA, Parke made the first 3D animation of a representation of a human face, his wife's face. This animation used a wireframe geometry overlaid with Gouraud shading that produces approximate renderings of curved surfaces. The technique was invented by Parke's Utah colleague Henri Gouraud.[1][2]

A Computer Animated Face

In 1974, he created a more complex, parametric model of a human face, demonstrating various expressions and speech synchronization.[3] Snippets of this animation, along with Ed Catmull's 1972 animation of his left hand, were used in the 1976 film Futureworld.

He has worked at the New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Laboratory.[4]

Parke teaches at Texas A&M University in the Visualization Sciences program.

gollark: ++experimental_qa "Bees" bee processor?
gollark: My home 7nm process is not quite ready for large-scale ICs yet.
gollark: This would be better if I could attain a GPU, but they are expensive at the best of times, which is not now.
gollark: (some of the delay is communing with wikipedia, but the network isn't fast either)
gollark: It takes HUNDREDS of milliseconds.

References

  1. Parke, Frederic (1972), "Computer generated animation of faces", ACM '72 Proceedings of the ACM Annual Conference, 1: 451–457, doi:10.1145/800193.569955
  2. Parke, Frederic (1972). Computer generated animation of faces (Technical report). University of Utah. UTEC-CSs-72-120.
  3. Parent, Rick (2012), Computer Animation: Algorithms and Techniques, Newnes, p. 23, 9780124159730
  4. "NYITer's: Where Are They Now?". cs.cmu.edu.
  • Homepage of Frederic I. Parke at Texas A&M University
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